Where is the Collarbone?

More About Your Injury

A broken collarbone is a common injury in young children and teenagers. This is because these bones DO NOT become hard until adulthood.

Symptoms of a mild broken collarbone include:

Pain where the broken bone is

Having a hard time moving your shoulder or arm, and pain when you do move them

A shoulder that seems to be sagging

A cracking or grinding noise when you raise your arm

Bruising, swelling, or bulging over your collarbone

Signs of a more serious break are:

Decreased feeling or a tingling feeling in your arm or fingers

Bone that is pushing against or through the skin

What to Expect

The type of break you have will determine your treatment. If the bones are:

Aligned (meaning that the broken ends meet), the treatment is to wear a sling and relieve your symptoms. Casts are not used for broken collarbones.

Not aligned (meaning the broken ends do not meet), you may need surgery.

If you have a broken collarbone, you should follow up with an orthopedist (bone doctor).

Healing of your collarbone depends on:

Where the break in the bone is (in middle or at the end of the bone).

If the bones are aligned.

Your age. Children may heal in 3 to 6 weeks. Adults may need up to 12 weeks.

Symptom Relief

Applying an ice pack can help relieve your pain. Make an ice pack by putting ice in a zip lock plastic bag and wrapping a cloth around it. DO NOT put the bag of ice directly on your skin. This could injure your skin.

On the first day of your injury, apply the ice for 20 minutes of every hour while awake. After the first day, ice the area every 3 to 4 hours for 20 minutes each time. Do this for 2 days or longer.

For pain, you can use ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin), naproxen (Aleve, Naprosyn), or acetaminophen (Tylenol). You can buy these pain medicines at the store.

Talk with your provider before using these medicines if you have heart disease, high blood pressure, kidney disease, or have had stomach ulcers or internal bleeding in the past.

DO NOT take more than the amount recommended on the bottle or by your provider.

DO NOT take these medicines for the first 24 hours after your injury. They can cause bleeding.

DO NOT give aspirin to children.

Your provider may prescribe a stronger medicine if you need it.

Activity

At first you need to wear a sling or brace as the bone heals. This will keep:

Your collarbone in the right position to heal

You from moving your arm, which would be painful

Once you can move your arm without pain, you can start gentle exercises if your provider says it's OK. These will increase the strength and movement in your arm. At this point, you will be able to wear your sling or brace less.

When you restart an activity after a broken collarbone, build up slowly. If your arm, shoulder, or collarbone begins to hurt, stop and rest.

Most people are advised to avoid contact sports for a few months after their collarbones have healed.

DO NOT place rings on your fingers until your provider tells you it is safe to do so.

When to Call the Doctor

Call your provider or orthopedist if you have questions or concerns about the healing of your collarbone.